T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
516.1 | No Way Out | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | | Fri Oct 16 1987 12:18 | 25 |
|
What do you think, Alan? From the way in which you posed the question,
it would seem that you are opposed to the retaliation you described.
I'm opposed to it, too. The deaths you described sound like horrible
ones, and the young people who killed their parents must be in terrible
agony over what they've done no matter what kind of abuse they
suffered. But if you consider the lack of responsiveness of the
police and courts when it comes to "family" matters, it's not at
all surprising to me that this kind of retaliation is occurring.
I also sensed from your note that you're not entirely certain that
the parents did anything to precipitate the attack. Well, I suppose
that there are a handful of deranged children out there who might be
capable of committing violence against their loving parents, but
normally the bonds between a parent and child are so strong (even
in abusive families) that only the most traumatic abuse could bring
a child to kill his or her parent. In almost every such case that
I've ever heard about, there was an established pattern of abuse
to which neighbors and families could testify, and the police
had been involved on at least one occasion prior to the death.
I believe that children who kill their parents do so only after
they believe that there is no other way out for them.
Justine
|
516.2 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Oct 16 1987 12:20 | 20 |
|
> To what extent do we, as a society, want to sanction "vigilante
> justice" - in effect, the execution for alleged crimes for which,
> even if those killed had been tried and convicted, capital punishment
> would not have been imposed by the state?
I think it is not a question of vigilante justice but rather of
"justifiable homicide." If you kill someone in self-defense and the
homicide is found to be justifiable, that does not mean that the state
would have executed the deceased if you had only wounded him or her.
Personally, I think that justifiable homicide should include cases of
attempted rape and attempted torture as well as attempted
murder/assault.
To digress for a bit, I wonder how many cases of elderly parent abuse
are a result of getting back at a parent for past abuses...
JP
|
516.3 | There Was No Hidden Agenda | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Oct 16 1987 12:52 | 33 |
| RE: .1
Justine, if you read anything into the way I posed the question,
I didn't intend it. I tried to state the background of the cases
as objectively as I could.
I do not believe that these kids killed their parents for no reason;
I'm sure they had plenty of reason for what they did.
What I was trying to get at, though, is that we all have been taught
that we have laws to protect us, and that no person ought to
take the law into his/her own hands. Also there is the concept of
the presumption of a person's innocence, until he/she has been
proven guilty in a Court of Law.
When Bernhardt Goetz shot the four youths on the subway train, he
at first was lauded as something of a folk hero - a Charles Bronson
"Death Wish" kind of character.
Maybe what I'm really asking is:
- Have we given up on the principle of presumption of innocence?
- Do we want people to, again, be able to take the law into their
own hands, as in the days of our "wild West" - a "string-'em-up-
they're-guilty" attitude?
- Should the "vigilante punishment" for the crime be sanctioned
to be more severe than the "legal" punishment for the same
offense (somewhat akin to a police officer's use of deadly
force in shooting to death a suspect fleeing from a stolen car)?
Alan
|
516.4 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Oct 16 1987 13:32 | 16 |
| <--(.3)
Alan, I think that what we're seeing is a response to the failure of
societal agencies to protect us. If society as a whole cannot be held
accountable for the failure of police to protect us, but we can be
punished for a too-vigorous self-defence, then we are trapped in the
role of victim because all the advantages then accrue to the criminal.
People are evaluating and rejecting that Official Victim position.
The kids Goetz shot are free to menace whomever they please because all
costs will be borne by their victims unless they happen to pick on some
undercover cop, a very unlikely event. Leaving tangled motives aside,
we can say that Goetz recognised that and decided to change the odds by
not following the rules they were counting on him following.
=maggie
|
516.5 | a strong bond to break | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Oct 16 1987 13:47 | 35 |
| If the "powers that be" will not protect you, then if you are to
retain your sanity and/or your life, at some point you must protect
yourself.
IF the abuse that was perpetrated on these people was by a stranger
on a streetcorner, the person's action in self-defense would be
obvious. IF the abuse, on the other hand, is perpetrated on the
victim in her home, by her family, time after time, day after day,
the picture changes. Is the message that a one-time shot of violence
is OK to defend yourself against, but otherwise, get used to it?
Is the message that if the violence is perpetrated on you by your
family, get used to it?
Can the society afford many more people, who, abused as children
grow up to be abusers themselves?
If no-one else will protect you, you *must* protect yourself.
It takes a lot for kids, especially, to go so far as to harm or
kill their parents. The parent-child bond is difficult to break.
How many times have we all seen children fiercely loyal to parents
who (frankly) weren't worth it. No. That bond is strong. It takes
incredible mistreatment to break it.
I'm sure if the police/DA had evidence to go to trial which proved
these people did these awful things without provocation, or enuff
provocation, there would've been trial(s). I'd bet the evidence
was crystal clear that these peole took more than any human ought
to before they did what they did.
"If I am not for myself, who will be for me?"
Dawn
|
516.6 | Goetz a victim of abuse? | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:19 | 17 |
|
I'm a little uncomfortable comparing the actions of B. Goetz to
those of a child who kills her parent because she can no longer
stand being tortured. From the sketchy info I heard about the Goetz
episode, it sounded like his response *might* not have been completely
justified. I'm not sure I believe that his life was in danger or
that he felt trapped; these seem to be important elements in the
minds of abuse victims who strike back. We can argue all we want
about whether or not they are right to retalliate, but I think an
important issue to keep in mind is that some people will strike
back if they feel there is no other way to save themselves. A question
we might ask ourselves is, "What can we do so that homicide is not
their only option?" The concept of presumed innocence is important
in court, but a lot of these cases don't even go to court... and
that's why the victims strike back.
Justine
|
516.7 | Nit alert | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:52 | 8 |
| John (.2),
You will be cheered (well, probably not) to learn that a plea
of justifiable homicide may be entered whenever someone killed
to prvent a violent felony, including rape, torture, and even
armed robbery.
Ann B.
|
516.8 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:54 | 13 |
| <--(.6)
Sorry, Justine, I didn't mean to draw too much of a parallel between
Goetz and the kids who kill their abusive parents. I agree that Goetz
seems to have had at least some very tangled motives, and that's why I
put in the disclaimer that I did.
The point I would wish to make is the same as Dawn's and yours: if we
perceive that we are alone and our backs are to the wall, the only
response that makes sense is to fight back with everything we've got.
Any other action or inaction has to be seen as witlessly
self-destructive.
=maggie
|
516.9 | Then Let's Change the Law | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Oct 16 1987 15:18 | 16 |
| So are we then all saying that we have a "sub-rosa" set of laws,
which allow us to take matters into our own hands because we feel
the "real" laws are ineffective?
If this is the case, then shouldn't these "new" laws become codified?
Because if they're not given force-of-law status, there's nothing
to say that sometime, somewhere, some child, accused of killing
his/her parent no matter how understandable this action may be,
will be found guilty of premeditated murder - and sentenced to
death.
The vagaries of enforcement of the "real" laws will someday work
against the victims of the currently-defined-"legal" victims.
Society should not depend upon this type of Russian-roulette.
Alan
|
516.10 | | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Oct 16 1987 15:33 | 7 |
| Um...I don't believe minors can be sentenced to death.
I don't know the law, but there may indeed be something that covers
this which contributed to the lack of prosecution in these cases.
Dawn
|
516.11 | Other's awareness | USADEC::KIFER | | Fri Oct 16 1987 16:30 | 11 |
| It was mentioned that the young girl from New York felt that she
had no way out of the situation. A TIME magazine which I was reading
last night stated that she was too embarassed to try to get help,
but yet some neighbors knew and suspected. Why didn't those neighbors
do something to help. If they had called in someone to help the
death might not have occurred. We need to be there for our children
and teenagers. That girl should have some one that she felt
comfortable with to let know what was going on. Obviously she didn't,
that the real shame of it all.
Lee
|
516.12 | Child killers | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Fri Oct 16 1987 16:55 | 15 |
| Re: .10
There are several people sentenced to death in various prisons
around the country who were minors when the crime was committed.
I'm not sure of the exact number, but I think it is about 6.
This is one of the issues facing the U. S. Supreme Court this term.
Be glad that Bork is not one of the sitting justices.
Re: .11
According to the TIME article, there are about 300 cases a year
of minor children killing their parents.
-bs
|
516.13 | A PS to .12 | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Fri Oct 16 1987 16:57 | 5 |
| I'm not implying that the minors facing the death penalty are the
same ones that have killed their parents - I'm sorry if this
juxtaposition of statements gave that impression.
-bs
|
516.14 | DA Doesn't have to prosecute | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Fri Oct 16 1987 17:27 | 16 |
|
I remember reading somewhere that most of the women serving time
in prison for murder killed an abusive husband/live-in lover, so
it would seem that the laws are already being enforced somewhat
selectively. I believe the trend not to prosecute in cases like
these is new. The laws around justifiable homicide are already
on the books; they just haven't been enforced before. Public
sympathy for a victim-who-murders may influence a DA's decision
not to prosecute.
Re children and the death penalty, I believe that in order for a child
to be sentenced to death, she or he must be tried as an adult. That
requires a separate, pre-trial hearing.
Justine
|
516.15 | If It's A Law, It Can Be Enforced | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Oct 16 1987 17:27 | 18 |
| RE: .14
Justine, your statement about the laws being enforced selectively
is the point I was trying to make.
So long as any law is on the Statute Books, it *can* be used to
prosecute or not, depending upon the mood (or political aspir-
ations) of the District Attorney, who can be pressured either
way by the people who will re-elect him or her.
It's exactly this kind of selective enforcement of Georgia's
sodomy laws that the Supreme Court upheld. Georgia's sodomy laws
have only been invoked, recently, against homosexual activities,
even though all sexual coupling that is not traditional male-female
"missionary" position is defined as sodomous.
Alan
|
516.16 | SAME DIFFERENCE | CSTVAX::MPOWELL | | Mon Oct 19 1987 14:50 | 17 |
| I do think that alot of teenagers and kids who go thru sexual or
physical abuse end up feeling up against a wall with no where to
turn!
About a year ago a young teenager (13 or 14) walked out of her school
and jumped in front of a train. It was later discovered in the
girls diary that she had been being sexually abused for years by
her father/stepfather. Now why didn't this girl just kill him?
Oviously she felt she had no way out, but instead of killing him
she took her own life! Its sad that she felt no-one could help
her! How many others have taken thier own life because they were
in a situation like this!
Sad enough to say that it has alot to do with people not wanting
to get involved, and turning the other way!
Tanya
|
516.17 | Lucky to be alive | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Oct 20 1987 15:17 | 46 |
| The following is being posted for a member of this community who
wishes to remain annonymous.
***********************************************************************
When I was about 12 years old, my mother took my sister to her bed, and
kicked my father out. My father shared a room with me for the next four
years. I was sexually abused, beaten, and humiliated. When he was drunk
and abusive, I called the police. They were not interested in interfering
in domestic matters, and typically would not show up. Friends, relatives,
neighbors - they all looked the other way, and my suffering was invisible.
I really felt I couldn't live with the situation any more, and I tried to
kill myself. I did not suceed at suicide; neither did I suceed in bringing
any attention to the horror I was living through.
Finally at the age of sixteen, the police did come one time when I called
them. They told my father to spend the night somewhere else, and that they
were going to leave. Then my father punched one of them, and they arrested
him.
It is ok to hit your child or your wife.
It is not ok to hit a cop.
Funny, isn't it?
I was bright enough to get early admission to college, and left home at
sixteen.
I am glad I did not succeed at killing myself.
I am glad I did not kill my father.
I have spent many years in therapy healing myself and finding my way in
the world. My heart goes out to these children who have been in a situation
that is so abysmal that killing the parent is the only way out. I cannot
help but think that their approach (attempting to kill the offender) shows
more self esteem than mine (attempting to kill myself). I have seen the
response of the system. I have walked in these children's shoes. I hurt
for them and for myself. I am ANGRY that there are so few alternatives
to such a terrible situation. We must find a way in this society to protect
children before they respond with suicide or homicide.
Sign me,
lucky to escape with my life
|
516.18 | Hang in there | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Oct 20 1987 18:22 | 7 |
| re .17
Your courage is a good thing to see. You may feel like you were weak
because of it (many rape victims do), but to survive such a thing shows
incredible courage.
Lee
|
516.19 | thanks for sharing | BRUTUS::MTHOMSON | Why re-invent the wheel | Wed Oct 21 1987 11:45 | 7 |
| re .17
I weep with you. Society can hust an already intolerable situation.
Your courage gives me hope for the other children...We all have
to learn to get past survival you've done that..
MaggieT
|
516.20 | There are lots of "No Way Out"s | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Wed Oct 21 1987 13:40 | 51 |
| RE: .0
This is what happens when you have a Court of Law, instead of a Court of
Justice. Think of yourself talking to someone who is involved in Court, and
asking, "Do you want Law?", vs. "Do you want Justice?". The answer would most
likely be, "Hell no, I want Justice!".
Our Court system has become mostly Law, if you get Justice, you're damned lucky!
The problem is that the Court system has turned into a bureaucracy of laws,
when the original purpose of a 'Court' has to judge those situations where no
predefined rule or law could be formulated to handle the situation.
RE: .1
I know what you mean about "No Way Out". I fear for mothers and children under
the recent (MA) child custody and support laws, because I fear that many fathers
will feel that they have "No Way Out". Will we see an increase in divorce
related violence soon in MA?
As with other 'justified' situations you can't help thinking at least once that,
'maybe they deserved it'.
RE: .2
"Have we given up on the principle of presumption of innocence?"
No, but it's to the point where Justice cannot be done because of law.
"Do we want people to, again, be able to take the law into their own hands,"
Not I.
"Should the "vigilante punishment" for the crime be sanctioned to be more severe
than the "legal" punishment for the same offense"
Again, I think that there is a difference between vigilante justice, and
'victim' justice/ self defence. vigilante justice is the situation where
youself are not in danger, or will be in the future; vigilante justice is when
someone else is threatened, or it is after the fact. Self defence / victim
justice is when you yourself is in danger that you are not able to get out of.
RE: .14
"I remember reading somewhere that most of the women serving time in prison for
murder killed an abusive husband/live-in lover, so it would seem that the laws
are already being enforced somewhat selectively."
Are you saying that the men who have been in their shoes are not in prison???
Jim.
|
516.21 | Somebody Has To Write Unwritten Laws | FDCV03::ROSS | | Wed Oct 21 1987 16:10 | 33 |
| Okay. So far I've not seen too many (any) replies, indicating that
Noters here are concerned with the fact that people have seen fit
to take the law into their own hands for what, they perceived, were,
and are, valid reasons.
What we're sliding into again, I think, is the "code" of the "unwritten
law". Doesn't anybody recall the "unwritten law" that sanctioned
a husband's killing his unfaithful wife and her lover, if the husband
caught them in bed together? Some communities even extended the
concept of this unwritten law to mean that it was okay for a husband
to kill his unfaithful wife and her lover at any time, not just
if he found them together in bed. This unwritten law was the heart
of the very widely acclaimed story, "Anatomy of a Murder".
In other times, black men in the South were lynched because they
broke their communities' unwritten laws: they slept with (NOT raped,
the women were willing) white women. The lynchers were thought by most
local whites to be heroes; the lynchees were cut down from the trees and
quickly (and quietly) buried. The blacks knew enough not to protest
too loudly. That, too, would be breaking the unwritten law.
At still other times (and probably still going on today), homosexuals
were derided, beaten, sometimes killed, because they were breaking
their communities's unwritten laws against "perversities and crimes
against nature".
Doesn't anybody here ever worry that, someday, somewhere, some person
will decide that *you* deserve to be killed, because you have violated
his or her own (or the community's) unwritten law? And since it's
an unwritten law, chances are you will not even know of its existence,
let alone that you have broken it.
Alan
|
516.22 | | CYBORG::MALLETT | Situation hopless but not serious | Wed Oct 21 1987 17:22 | 40 |
| Having stood in the shoes of one who has broken an unwritten
law (and nearly paid the ultimate price), it does bother me,
but I'm not sure what the solution is (if any). I have a
notion that such laws are part of the risk of living on a
planet with imperfect beings.
Unwritten "laws", by their very existance, means that certain
behaviors are widely sanctioned or proscribed despite the fact that
they are not within the framework of the formal legal code.
Over time, they are usually either formally outlawed or
codified into law. Unfortunately, this doesn't do a hell
of a lot for the victim at the time. I have a feeling that
in time, there will be legislation addressing some of the
issues in this note. Until then, there is a high risk of
(future) crimes being unprosecuted.
The other issue raised was "What does the individual do if (s)he
feels the formal legal system is powerless to provide protection?"
I think that if a person believes there is no chance of changing
the system, the individual will defend him/herself or become
a victim. This sort of edges into the discussion going on about
the draft, but I personally feel that most people, when put in
a life-or-death situation for themselves or their loved ones,
will apply any and all force necessary to survive/defend despite
what they ordinarily feel about violence.
Steve
P.S. While working for the Boston Draft Resistance Group in '68
I was drafted and my attempts for CO status failed. It's with
no pride that I tell you that one fire fight convinced me that
while I meant well with my anti-violence rhetoric, when the
bullets started flying, survival became my one and only priority.
I pray that humanity finds those better solutions because I know
what I (and most of us) will do if we find ourselves pushed to
the wall. . .
|
516.23 | nobody asked, just my opinion... | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Oct 22 1987 11:03 | 9 |
| re "Law vs. Justice":
Seems to me most people want neither, they want REVENGE.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
516.24 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Oct 22 1987 11:25 | 6 |
|
I agree that most people don't want justice -- they just want a break.
Justice is getting what you deserve. If I got all that I deserved, I'd
probably be one hurting puppy...
JP
|
516.25 | Revenge ? Phoey !! | MORGAN::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Thu Oct 22 1987 11:45 | 7 |
|
RE .23 Revenge , hell, I want to get one up on em and stay there.
As Conan says " Victorious, is to drive you enemies into the ground
before they do it to you."
Bob B
|
516.26 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Thu Oct 22 1987 13:16 | 15 |
| re .23
Bingo! That is one of my major problems with the idea of people
taking the law into their own hands, even in extreme circumstances.
This whole subject is terribly scary -- what happens if we permit
murder, even if it appears the murderer was forced by circumstance?
If we do not punish that criminal, where will it stop? If _this_
is justifiable, what about when _I_ get killed for having a big
mouth? Or my mother for being a woman in a man's field? Or the
contractor who accepted my Dad's money and refused to do the work?
Justice is nice, but I like having laws to protect me and mine.
Lee
|
516.27 | The Lynch Mob supported justice, too | SCRUFF::CONLIFFE | Better living through software | Thu Oct 22 1987 13:48 | 33 |
| There's something about law providing "justice for all".
What does this mean? Well, obviously, it DOESN'T mean that everyone, all the
time, is going to get their own way! It is unfortunate that most of the claims
of "Law, no! I want justice!" can usually be traced to a legal battle that has
been lost, or one in which the legal decision was opposed to one's own opinion
on the topic.
Justice means "the upholding of what is just; fair treatment and due reward..."
or "Moral or absolute rightness". BUT WHO DEFINES MORAL RIGHTNESS? WHO
DEFINES FAIR TREATMENT? ME? YOU? YOUR EX-SPOUSE'S LAWYER? YOUR WORST ENEMY?
The Law is the embodiment of community standards applied on a national scale;
elected officials from communities (with standards of their own) get together
and define a set of acceptable behaviour for the greater community, namely
the country. The law is supposed to ensure that one's pleas for justice are
not judged on race, creed, color, sex or religious belief, but rather on
principles which are applied more or less equitably to all.
If you don't like the current laws, talk to your elected representative. Write
letters to have the law changed (that's how it works in a democracy). But until
the law is changed, then we must live by the existing laws (or break them to
stage a "test case", in which the legal process itself will demonstrate the
viability of the law being challenged).
To condone the law being broken "in certain cases" is to move the definition
of "justice" from the national community back down into the neighbourhoods.
This brings us back to the situation that the legal system was developed to
avoid; that your rights and expectations of justice will be based on personal
prejudice, sex, skin color, creed or personal habits. That's just ducky for
you PROVIDING you are part of the active majority in the community in which you
are being judged. For the rest of us, it's a nightmare!
Nigel
(now back to read-only)
|
516.28 | divergance of topic | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Thu Oct 22 1987 15:22 | 44 |
| I think we've diverged from the topic... (as what's *new*?)
I think the topic is more like self defense, then taking the law into your
own hands.
RE: .23
Is Revenge Just? We talk about people getting their just desserts?
Is getting a break Just?
Personally, I don't want revenge, or a break, although they are nice when you
get them, and nice when you can give them.
RE: .26
"I like having laws to protect me and mine."
What about when laws ***don't*** protect you and yours? What about when
laws seperate you and yours???
RE: .27
Nothing personal Nigel, but excuse me while I barf on your law and order speech.
I guess that I am an optimist. I believe that people, particularly (supposedly
impartial) judges can do a better job of maintaining justice, then an imanimate
law.
I'm not talking about going out and gunning people down... I am talking about
getting the system to recognize that a wrong is being done, and the people
saying, 'Yup, you're getting screwed, too bad *I* can't do anything about
it...'. And you go through the system, and *every* single person will say,
'Sorry, I'd like to help you, but I can't'.
'It's ain't my job, 'mon...' I'm talking about giving people responsibility,
without giving them the authority to carry out their responsibilities.
"If you don't like the current laws, talk to your elected representative. Write
letters to have the law changed (that's how it works in a democracy)."
You forget, this ain't a democracy...
Jim.
|
516.29 | What about Reagan? | ULTRA::GUGEL | Don't read this. | Fri Oct 23 1987 14:45 | 9 |
| Talking about taking the law into one's own hands ...
It's curious that Reagan thinks *he* can ignore the War Powers Act
because *he* thinks it's unconstitutional.
Reagan's breaking the law. No one thinks anything of it. What
a great example.
-Ellen
|
516.30 | Martin Luther King is guilty of it also | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Oct 23 1987 15:16 | 11 |
| re .29:
I think the only way to challenge the Constitutionality of a law
is to disobey it.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
516.31 | down the rathole we go.... | ULTRA::LARU | do i understand? | Fri Oct 23 1987 15:57 | 8 |
| re .30
Ah, so Reagan's just involved in a little civil disobedience.
It's nice to know he's carrying on a great tradition!
bruce
|
516.32 | | CSTVAX::MPOWELL | | Fri Oct 23 1987 16:45 | 8 |
| I do not think that the people described in .0 killed for REVENGE!
The experiences described in .0 are very traumatic ones. I think
it should be very hard for anyone to try justify or not justify
on these types of matters unless they have gone through it.....
|
516.33 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Oct 23 1987 19:08 | 10 |
| re .32:
I did not say that they _did_ kill for revenge.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
516.34 | | CSTVAX::MPOWELL | | Mon Oct 26 1987 10:15 | 10 |
| RE .33
I don't recall referring to your note(s) when I wrote .32. I had
just went through the replies in this entry and came across a notes
that mentioned revenge. So I wrote .32, saying that I do not
think(being my opinion) that the crimes described in .0 were commited
for revenge. And thats what I meant. Sorry if you thought the
note was directed at you, it wasn't.
Tanya
|
516.35 | | FPOVAX::RAINEY | | Wed Dec 16 1987 12:59 | 0
|